Use size_t instead of ELFT::uint for the string table offset. If the
linker is built 32-bit, it can't write an output file larger than 2GB.
Other code in this area uses size_t as well.
llvm-svn: 284680
Preparation to implement DW_AT_alignment support:
- We pass non-zero align value to DIBuilder only when alignment was forced
- Modify tests to match this change
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24426
llvm-svn: 284679
- Add alignment attribute to DIVariable family
- Modify bitcode format to match new DIVariable representation
- Update tests to match these changes (also add bitcode upgrade test)
- Expect that frontend passes non-zero align value only when it is not default
(was forcibly aligned by alignas()/_Alignas()/__atribute__(aligned())
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25073
llvm-svn: 284678
Previously, we were checking the existence of an entry symbol
too early. It was done before the linker script processor creates
symbols defined in scripts. Fixes bug 30743.
llvm-svn: 284676
load commands that use the MachO::thread_command type
but are not used in llvm libObject code but used in llvm tool code.
This includes the LC_UNIXTHREAD and LC_THREAD
load commands.
A quick note about the philosophy of the error checking in
libObject for Mach-O files, the idea behind the checking is
that we never will return a Mach-O file out of libObject that
contains unknown things in the load commands.
To do this the 32-bit ARM and PPC general tread states
needed to be defined as two test case binaries contained
them. If other thread states for other CPUs need to be
added we will do that as needed.
Going forward the LC_MAIN load command is used to
set the entry point in Mach-O executables these days
instead of an LC_UNIXTHREAD as was done in the past.
So today only in core files are LC_THREAD load commands
and thread states usually found.
Other thread states have not yet been defined in
include/Support/MachO.h at this time. But that can be
added as needed with their corresponding checking also
added.
llvm-svn: 284668
RegisterInfos_arm64.h. These register definitions include the
offset into the register context, which will vary depending on the
endianness of the arm64 target system (e.g. s8 is at offset 0 in
v8 on little-endian, it is at offset 12 on big-endian) and I've
only added the little-endian definitions to the table. If we want
to add a big-endian arm64 target, we'll need a separate table which
uses the big-endian offsets for these registers. I changed the
name of the register table from g_register_infos_arm64 to
g_register_infos_arm64_le to make it explicit that this is the
little-endian version of that table, and updated users of the table
to use the new name.
I added support for the "w", "s", and "d" registers to
RegisterContextDarwin_arm64 but it was more an example than anything
useful -- this plugin is only used when working with core files and
darwin core files do not (today) include the floating point register
context, so it only added the support for the "w" pseudo registers.
When we're connected to a real arm64 device, we use the ProcessGDBRemote
code.
llvm-svn: 284666
Profile runtime can generate an empty raw profile (when there is no function in
the shared library). This empty profile is treated as a text format profile. A
test format profile without the flag of "#IR" is thought to be a clang
generated profile. So in llvm profile merging, we will get a bogus warning of
"Merge IR generated profile with Clang generated profile."
The fix here is to skip the empty profile (when the buffer size is 0) for
profile merge.
Reviewers: vsk, davidxl
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D25687
llvm-svn: 284659
This is needed by downstream projects such as swift to get proper cmake
dependency information for LLVM/Clang targets.
A few months ago I added support for exporting this information for Clang
libraries. In order to be incremental, I did not add support for exporting clang
tools as well at that time. Now such support is needed, so I am committing this
incremental code.
llvm-svn: 284658
Chapter 5.
Chapter 5 demonstrates remote JITing: code is executed on the remote, not the
machine running the REPL, so it's the remote's triple (and TargetMachine) that
we need.
llvm-svn: 284657
These tests rely on two sections being allocated with a limited displacement
from one to the other to work. We've never guaranteed this, and consequently
these tests usually fail. That led to them being XFAILed, but now they XPASS
whenever the sections do happen to be allocated nearby in memory. So I'm
removing these for now to get rid of the noise. We can re-instate them if/when
we take the time to implement a displacement-respecting allocator.
llvm-svn: 284654
corresponding arguments are unexpanded pack expansions, we can compute the
result without substituting them. This significantly improves the memory usage
and performance of make_integer_sequence implementations that do this kind of
thing:
using result = integer_sequence<T, Ns ..., sizeof...(Ns) + Ns ...>;
... but note that such an implementation will still perform O(sizeof...(Ns)^2)
work while building the second pack expansion (we just have a somewhat lower
constant now).
In principle we could get this down to linear time by caching whether the
number of expansions of a pack is constant, or checking whether we're within an
alias template before scanning the pack for pack expansions (since that's the
only case in which we do substitutions within a dependent context at the
moment), but this patch doesn't attempt that.
llvm-svn: 284653
LLVM now uses uint32_t for DebugInfo alignment for space efficiency,
in this patch we change frontend DebugInfo-related variables to uint32_t too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25621
llvm-svn: 284651
This patch builds on clang r284648, and allows the runtime directory to make the bootstrap builds depend on the builtin libraries.
This patch also make the bootstrap build depend on configuring the other runtimes because the libcxx headers are copied during configuration. I have left a TODO in the code to remove that once I come up with a better solution.
llvm-svn: 284650
0 - X --> X, if X is 0 or the minimum signed value
0 - X --> 0, if X is 0 or the minimum signed value and the sub is NSW
I noticed this pattern might be created in the backend after the change from D25485,
so we'll want to add a similar fold for the DAG.
The use of computeKnownBits in InstSimplify may be something to investigate if the
compile time of InstSimplify is noticeable. We could replace computeKnownBits with
specific pattern matchers or limit the recursion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25785
llvm-svn: 284649
Having this target allows other parts of the build system to add to the bootstrap dependencies without needing to be defined before the bootstrap targets are created.
This will specifically be used connect the builtins build from the LLVM runtimes directory as a dependency of the next build stage.
llvm-svn: 284648
Summary:
Previously, when you did something not allowed in a host+device function
and then caused it to be codegen'ed, we would print out an error telling
you that you did something bad, but we wouldn't tell you how we decided
that the function needed to be codegen'ed.
This change causes us to print out a callstack when emitting deferred
errors. This is immensely helpful when debugging highly-templated code,
where it's often unclear how a function became known-emitted.
We only print the callstack once per function, after we print the all
deferred errors.
This patch also switches all of our hashtables to using canonical
FunctionDecls instead of regular FunctionDecls. This prevents a number
of bugs, some of which are caught by tests added here, in which we
assume that two FDs for the same function have the same pointer value.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25704
llvm-svn: 284647
Summary:
CanonicalDeclPtr<T> is just like a T*, except it calls
T::getCanonicalDecl() on construction.
This is useful as the key in a "set of canonical Decls" -- it's much
less error-prone than calling getCanonicalDecl() every time you touch
the set.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, tra
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25703
llvm-svn: 284644
Summary:
This fixes two related bugs:
1) Previously, if you had a non-wrong side call at some source code
location L, we wouldn't emit errors for wrong-side calls that appeared
at L.
2) We'd only emit one wrong-side error per source code location, when we
actually want to emit it twice if we hit this line more than once due to
e.g. template instantiation.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: rnk, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25702
llvm-svn: 284643
This bot does not produce the IR I expect -- it's missing some
'handler.dynamic_type_cache_miss:' labels. We don't need to rely on
those labels, so get rid of them in hopes of making the bot happy.
http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/cmake-clang-x86_64-linux/builds/55493
llvm-svn: 284639